Sponheim
The
Foundation of Castle Sponheim
The following legend tells us about the origin of
Castle
Sponheim in the valley of the Nahe. Once a Knight of Ravensberg was
eagerly
wooing the beautiful young Countess of Helmburg, but there was a
serious
obstacle in his path to success. Some years before a Ravensberg had
killed
a Helmburg in a quarrel, and since that time a bitter feud had divided
the
two houses. The brave knight felt this bitterly, but in spite of it he
did
not leave off his wooing. The young countess was much touched by his
constancy,
and one day she spoke thus to her impetuous suitor:
"My lord, if you will dare to go to the Holy Land
there
to expiate the sills of your fathers, and bring me back a relic from
the
sepulchre of our Redeemer, in that same hour your suit will be heard."
The knight in great joy kissed the maiden's
slender hand
and departed, carrying the memory of her sweet smile away in his heart.
Just at this time the call of the Emperor
Barbarossa,
now an old man, sounded throughout the land, and the Knight of
Ravensberg
did not neglect the opportunity, but hastened forth to join the
imperial
army.
The expedition was a long and terrible one, and
the troops
wearily made their way across the desert plains of Palestine.
The knight, though a brave man, had no special
love for
warlike adventures, and during these exhausting marches he thought
sorrowfully
of his quiet castle on the Nahe; of how he used to lie down there in
peace
and safety at night without being in fear of the Saracens who, under
cover
of darkness, would break in waving their scimitars in air, an event
which
was a nightly occurrence on this expedition.
Ravensberg however fought bravely in many a
battle, and
after the deaths of Barbarossa and his son, he joined the army of
Richard
the Lion-hearted.
Through all this anxious time he never forgot his
dear
one at home, and his longing for her became stronger every day, till it
seemed
to get beyond endurance.
King Richard was called back to England on some
urgent
state-affairs, and the Knight of Ravensberg was among the few
companions-in-arms
who embarked with him. The brave knight was very happy, and while the
king's
ship was sailing along the coast of Greece and up the blue Adriatic
Sea,
he would often stand on deck and weave bright dreams of the future;
sometimes
when no one was near, he would pull out a little black ebony box set
with
precious stones, on which a woman's name was written in golden letters;
the
interior was beautifully lined with costly silk, and a small splinter
of
wood lay within which the knight would kiss most reverently. He had
paid
a large sum of money for it in the Holy Land, where he had bought it
from
a Jewish merchant. This man had sworn to him that this fragment was
from
the cross to which the Son of God had been nailed.
The knight was very happy during this long
homeward journey,
but a great misfortune awaited him. Just as the crusaders came in sight
of
Italy their vessel was wrecked. The King of England, the Knight of
Ravensberg,
and a few others were saved with great difficulty, and brought to land.
But
our poor knight was inconsolable; he had held the precious little box
high
above him in the water, but a mighty wave had torn it from him, and on
opening
his eyes he found himself on shore. The holy relic had saved him, but
he
had lost his treasure, and now all hope of his promised happiness was
gone.
One day a weary and dispirited crusader returned
to the
castle of Helmburg. He announced his arrival to the young countess most
humbly,
but she, her lovely face lighted up by a bright smile, hurried to meet
the
knight whose sunburnt countenance betokened great hardships.
She listened silently to his mournful story, then
raising
her beautiful head She asked: "Was not the little box set with precious
stones,
and was not my name in golden letters on it ?"
"Yes, noble lady," said the knight, the bitterness
of
his disappointment newly awakened, "And now it lies at the bottom of
the
sea in spite of my fervent prayers to St. George to save the precious
fragment
of our Saviour's cross."
The countess beckoned to a page, and after a few
minutes
the boy brought her on a velvet cushion a little black ebony box set
with
precious stones with a woman's name written on it The knight uttered a
cry
of joyful surprise, for he recognised the jewel at once.
"Entreat the Holy Patron of Knighthood to pardon
you,"
said the countess with a smile. "A strange knight brought this to the
steward
a few days ago, and before I had time to send for him, he had
disappeared."
"It was St. George himself!" whispered the knight,
crossing
himself piously, "which proves that the fragment really belonged to the
Holy
Cross."
Then he bent his knee before his charming mistress
who,
with a deep blush on her cheeks, gave the man she had long but secretly
loved
love's first kiss.
A happy marriage was speedily celebrated in
Helmburg.
The Knight of Ravensberg then called his castle Spanheim (Span being
the
German word for chip) in memory of the precious little relic. This name
was
later on corrupted into Sponheim.
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